rockhound12
12-04-2007, 09:24 AM
does anyone have one of these?
Fuel Your Car With Water
Convert Your Car In Minutes To A Water-Running Car.
...link removed.. TDB
and is this for real?
im a mechanic and never heard of anything like this before
any of you real people used it or heard of it being used?
moved for easier finding
Blake
12-04-2007, 09:32 AM
No its not for real.. completely a scam. Don't buy into the idea unless you like throwing your money away :D
Just for an idea... look at the kit. They use a mason jar as their storage container for the water :rolleyes: Its amazing how people can get away with selling this crap.
shifty35
12-04-2007, 03:58 PM
I just read that website and had a good laugh.
tbaleno
12-04-2007, 11:02 PM
Didn't you just post a message about this before? I don't mind you asking questions, but since you have such low post counts, I'm not allowing you to link to sites that look like spam.
Sorry if this is an inconvenience, Feel free to discuss the topic, just don't post links.
rockhound12
12-05-2007, 06:06 AM
sorry about the link , but it is a sponser ad from this website
Hi Rockhound12:
___We can control some of the google ad content that cycles but the individual companies are not a direct sponsor of CleanMPG nor do we endorse most. What we saw was two or three posts with the same link and it appeared suspicious coming from a new member with so few posts.
___No harm no foul in my book :)
___Good Luck
___Wayne
tbaleno
12-05-2007, 09:24 AM
Yeah. These guys must be paying google a lot of money. That ad shows up way more than I would like.
Blake
12-05-2007, 02:46 PM
They probably can afford to do so since their kit is made out of cheap wiring and a mason jar. I honestly want to know who would fall for that after looking at a picture of the kit. That should send warning bells of right there.
shifty35
12-05-2007, 03:29 PM
They probably can afford to do so since their kit is made out of cheap wiring and a mason jar. I honestly want to know who would fall for that after looking at a picture of the kit. That should send warning bells of right there.
Any product which claims to violate the 2nd law of thermodynamics should set of warning bells...
Energy for electrolysis = Energy from combustion.
And then there is the fact that each step in conversion causes you to LOSE some energy to waste forms, guaranteeing that this product will actually decrease energy.
It's like if you had a hybrid car doing regen AND assist at the same time driving down the interstate... lose.